Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Climate change cutting Washington's Cascade snowpack
Seattle Post-Intelligencer: Climate change appears to be cutting the winter snowpack in Washington's Cascade Range by at least 20 percent, according to a researcher at the University of Washington. Rising temperatures mean more of the snow falls with a high water content, and melts and washes away long before it is needed by users in spring and summer months, the research found.
"All things being equal, if you make it one degree Celsius warmer, then 20 percent of the snowpack goes away for the central Puget Sound basin, the area we looked at," said Joseph Casola, a UW doctoral student in atmospheric sciences. His research looked at records from the annual April 1 measurement of the winter snowpack, and then used different methods to try and estimate how water content might have changed as a result of climate change.
Average temperatures in Washington rose about 1.5 degrees during the past century, according to the UW's Climate Impacts Group. That meant more winter precipitation fell as rain or melted more quickly. Ideally, snow that falls in the winter melts slowly in the spring and summer months, filling reservoirs in the Cascades. The water is released gradually to supply drinking water, water for fisheries and hydropower and irrigation water for farms.
Precipitation that falls as rain or as snow with a high water content tends to wash down rivers or into the ground during winter months, when it is not needed….
"Crossing the Cascades in June". The caption continued, "The Unprecedented Fall of Snow Last Winter Made Life Miserable for Tourists over the Sunset Highway Until Early Summer." The Argus (Seattle, Washington) Christmas issue 1916.
"All things being equal, if you make it one degree Celsius warmer, then 20 percent of the snowpack goes away for the central Puget Sound basin, the area we looked at," said Joseph Casola, a UW doctoral student in atmospheric sciences. His research looked at records from the annual April 1 measurement of the winter snowpack, and then used different methods to try and estimate how water content might have changed as a result of climate change.
Average temperatures in Washington rose about 1.5 degrees during the past century, according to the UW's Climate Impacts Group. That meant more winter precipitation fell as rain or melted more quickly. Ideally, snow that falls in the winter melts slowly in the spring and summer months, filling reservoirs in the Cascades. The water is released gradually to supply drinking water, water for fisheries and hydropower and irrigation water for farms.
Precipitation that falls as rain or as snow with a high water content tends to wash down rivers or into the ground during winter months, when it is not needed….
"Crossing the Cascades in June". The caption continued, "The Unprecedented Fall of Snow Last Winter Made Life Miserable for Tourists over the Sunset Highway Until Early Summer." The Argus (Seattle, Washington) Christmas issue 1916.
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